Hockey is a game played by linebacker-sized men moving at vehicular speed on razor-sharp blades. Skaters will travel almost 200 miles in a single game, slicing, shredding and shaving a surface just 200 feet long, 85 feet wide and 1 inch thick.

The abuse the New Jersey Devils and Los Angeles Kings will heap upon their rinks during the Stanley Cup finals would pulverize a frozen lake, let alone the ice in your freezer. Yet the ice here at the Prudential Center will remain so smooth that a puck will slide over it with nary a untoward bounce.

Creating a rink suitable for the rigors of professional hockey is a feat of engineering, a lesson in chemistry and a work of art.

Achieving that perfect consistency is an arduous task. Building a sheet from scratch takes four days, with veneer-thin layers of water successively frozen and leveled in a carefully controlled climate.

Outside the Prudential Center in downtown Newark, less than 24 hours before Game 1, heat shimmered over the sidewalks and humidity draped like a wet towel. Inside, the arena was a nippy 50 degrees and the mirror-clear ice a frigid 20 degrees. Its clarity reflected its purity. The water used to create it passes through a truck-sized, eight-filter reverse osmosis system to remove excess oxygen and trace minerals, two enemies of ideal consistency.

Oxygen is what gives an ice cube its cloudy core. Too much of it softens ice, making skate blades sink and founder. It's the same story with minerals - total displaced solids, in technician argot. Too much softens the ice, but too little hardens it, making traction difficult. Kryshak will sometimes add baking soda until the balance is right.

When the water is purified and primed, it's sprayed onto a concrete slab that rests on a labyrinth of pipes 9 miles long. Chilled salt water, which has a lower freezing point than fresh water, flows through the pipes, lowering the slab's temperature to 16 degrees Fahrenheit. That's cold enough to flash-freeze a layer of water precisely measured at 1/32 of an inch thick. Speed is essential.

"The more time you allow water to sit and freeze, the dirtier it gets," Kryshak said.

Much like plywood, layers of ice create strength and density. The first layer is called a bond, and it is painted bright white. Lines and logos are all placed in the first eighth of an inch.

Kryshak isn't yet using the Zamboni, hockey's iconic icemaking vehicle, but walks back and forth with a spray wand and water tank for eight hours. Only when the ice is a half-inch thick do the Zambonis come out, depositing more 1/32″ layers and scraping uneven patches level.

All told, Kryshak and his crew will spend four days laying down a sheet 1 inch thick, using sonar depth guns to ensure consistency across its surface. During the playoffs, when overtime can keep players on the ice into the wee hours and grind a standard sheet down to the concrete, Kryshak's team builds the ice to a depth of 1.5 inches.

The full bottom-to-top process will occur only a few times in a season - during basketball games and concerts the ice is simply covered, though a March circus visit and the threat of animal droppings necessitated a full rebuild - but maintenance is constant.

After every game and practice, Kryshak's crew will spend two hours working on the ice, fixing damage or flaws they hadn't noticed. Each morning, even if the ice hasn't been touched, they shave off the top layer and add a new one: Over the previous night, the arena's dry air - kept at 35 to 40 percent humidity - will have drawn impurity-laden moisture to the surface.

Come game time, Kryshak's team concerns itself with on-the-fly care. They measure temperature, relative humidity and dewpoint at ice level, instructing ventilation engineers to pull air into the rink or blow it out as needed. The ice surface is kept at steady 19 to 20 degrees, while the arena stays between 50 and 60 degrees. Humidity is allowed to rise gradually, perhaps to 50 percent by a game's end.

"When you run the dehumidifiers too much, you dehydrate the sheet," said Kryshak. "You cause it to be brittle."

Most community rinks use a single Zamboni, but the pros use two. That cuts the flooding time in half, buying a few more minutes for fresh ice to settle, but the machines must be identically calibrated. Any variation between them creates minute ridges that might cause a puck to bounce or a skate to slip. For want of a mere millimeter of ice, a game could be lost, a series changed.

"The process is long. It's tedious. It takes a lot of patience," Kryshak said. "But it's all worth it in the end when you get to this stage of the game. You're in the Stanley Cup final."